Geoengineering

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search the Bitterroot Bugle

making bureaucrats responsive

Surprising lessons are coming from those horrible communist countries China and Russia.

Impossible to ignore that Communist China manufactures and sells US darn near everything, while our unemployment is 21.7%, goods producing employment is 12.6%, and government employment is 14.2%.

This so-called capitalistic, free-market country of ours now has more regulators and controllers than it has producers. Describing that would take another essay. Here I want to point out that the big bad communist countries have moved into producing while our country moved to centralized command and control.

Starting and running a small business is so burdened with parasitic losses to government agents and bureaucratic red tape that startup enterprises are almost unheard of today.

Housing and building regulations weigh so heavily that homeownership has shrunken to a tiny segment of our population.

Government agents dole out groceries, housing, spending money, health care … well, most of what the socialists expect from their governments. However, our country doesn’t admit it, and is not as good at it as Russia and China, who acknowledge their government/social contracts.

In the article below, Russia shows us one feature we might as well embrace if we are not going back to being a free country.

The Russian government has changed the assessment criteria for civil servants – now their careers will depend on feedback from ordinary citizens, as well as their reactions to reviews posted on the internet.

The order, signed by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and published on the government’s website on Friday, details the rules by which the work of heads of regional branches of various state agencies can be assessed by ordinary citizens. The document also describes how the assessments can impact the officials’ careers, including “the early dismissal of such heads of agencies from their posts.”

There are two main components: the citizen evaluations of their work, and their handling of reviews posted on Gosuslugi – a site allowing communication with various state and municipal bodies and agencies.

The program will be funded as part of the ‘Information Society’ state program, according to the order.

In November 2017, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree with details of the criteria used for evaluating regional governors and other officials from the executive branch. These include the average income, the percentage of people with incomes below the cost of living, availability of housing, and the quality and availability of community services. In addition, the assessments of governors made by the population in the region will be taken into account.

Earlier this week, the head of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, recommended the president stop reading reports and analyses from the various regions and start basing his assessments simply on the number of happy faces seen on public web cams.

“Study their faces, where the faces are the happiest the governor must be good; where the faces are gloomy, unhappy, irritated and mean – this is also an excellent sign to judge the performance of a governor or a mayor,” Zhirinovsky said.

Putin thanked him for his input, but said that the external happiness of people is hardly a parameter that can reflect the real situation in a region’s economy.

selected quotations

[There is a] strong correlation between market freedom and lower government corruption — not terribly surprising, since the effect of increasing regulatory power is to shift ‘cheating’ from the private to the public sphere.